Horace Emerson Deemer was an American judge and chief justice of the Iowa Supreme Court.
Background
Horace Emerson Deemer was born on September 24, 1858, in Bourbon, Indiana, United States; the eldest of six children of John A. Deemer, a lumber dealer from an abolitionist family, and Elizabeth (Erwin) Deemer, whose father was an agent on the Underground Railroad.
In 1866, when Horace was eight, his family moved to Cedar County, Iowa, settling on a farm near West Liberty.
Education
Horace attended public schools, helped his father in his lumber business and furniture store, and became a competent carpenter. He earned a law degree at the State University of Iowa in Ames, Iowa, United States. Later, he was admitted to the bar.
Career
Deemer learned to earn his living by selling fruit along the West Liberty railway lines. Later, he joined a law firm in Nebraska. Miserable in Nebraska, he returned to Iowa, in 1879 and set up a law firm in Red Oak with a classmate, Joseph M. Junkin. They prospered. Deemer became a major in the Iowa National Guard, secretary of the county fair for six years, and chairman of the Republican County Committee during one campaign.
In 1886, at the age of 27, Deemer ran for district judge. Nonetheless, he was elected and re-elected four years later. In 1894 the legislature increased the number of Iowa Supreme Court judges from five to six. Governor Frank D. Jackson had known Deemer at the State University of Iowa and appointed him, at age 35, to the vacancy. He proved an exceptional judge and a prodigious worker, filing some 2,000 opinions in 22 years. He wrote them in pencil, in a fairly illegible hand. Among numerous great questions, he settled were constitutional cases concerning the anti-cigarette law, the party wall statute, and the antitrust statutes. He was repeatedly reelected to the court and was chief justice in 1898, 1904, 1908, and 1915.
Deemer had a passion for libraries. He was an ex-officio trustee of the State Library. During his 17 years as chairman of its Book Committee, the library more than doubled its number of books. With Judge La Vega G. Kinne, he organized the State Traveling Library of some 3,000 volumes. He founded a splendid library in Red Oak.
From 1895 to 1904 Deemer lectured in the Law Department of the State University of Iowa. He refused the deanship of the Law Department in 1900, but eventually became an honorary professor of jurisprudence. He lectured widely. Among his many lectures were “The Dedicatory Address for the Drake University Law Building” and “A History of the University”-the latter to celebrate the State University of Iowa’s 60th anniversary. Deemer’s chief written work was a three-volume tome, Iowa Pleading, and Practice, Law and Equity with Forms (1912), which became a standard work for Iowa lawyers.
In 1911 Deemer ventured into politics in the Iowa legislature’s last election of a U.S. senator. The Republicans held a large majority but were split. On the 33rd ballot, Deemer offered himself as a compromise candidate. He was defeated on the 68th ballot on the final day of the session.
Twice Deemer was recommended to the president to become a U.S. Supreme Court justice. In 1909 members of the Iowa congressional delegation urged President Taft to appoint Deemer. Checking Deemer’s “long and highly creditable record on the bench in Iowa,” the president found “that Mr. Deemer was much too liberal in his views for him to be named as a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States” and did not appoint him. In 1917, at the age of 58, Deemer died at the beautiful colonial house he had built on a hill at Red Oak.
For many years Deemer was chairman of the book committee, and under his guidance a great reference library was developed. With Judge Kinne he had an important part in the establishment of traveling libraries.
Deemer's early church associations were with the Friends and Baptists.
Membership
The astonishing breadth of his interests was shown by his active membership in many organizations, including the Iowa Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, the State Association of Charities and Corrections, the American Forestry Association, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American Free Art League.
Personality
Johnson Brigham, librarian of the Iowa State Library, in a tribute to Deemer after his death, described him as “a man of rare capacity and unbounded desire for service.
Horace had a genius for friendship and yet was wholly free from the petty arts of a jollier. Absolutely honest himself, he could brook no dishonesty in others.
Quotes from others about the person
A member of the bar wrote, “The only objection to his candidacy was that he was young, and it was suggested that skill as a baseball player, Deemer being conceded to be one of the best in the State, was not evidence of fitness for the position of Judge.”
Connections
In 1882 Deemer married Jeanette Gibson of Red Oak, for years one of the most prominent members of the State Federation of Woman’s Clubs. They had two daughters.
Father:
John A. Deemer
Mother:
Elizabeth (Erwin) Deemer
Wife:
Jeannette Gibson
References
The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa
Iowa has been blessed with citizens of strong character who have made invaluable contributions to the state and to the nation. In the 1930s alone, such towering figures as John L. Lewis, Henry A. Wallace, and Herbert Hoover hugely influenced the nation’s affairs.